News Scrapbook 1986-1988

San Diego, CA (San ~iego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217 089) (Cir. S. 341 :840) FEB 8

S n Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454) FEB 6 1

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341,840) fEB 9

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,089) (Cir. S. 341 ,840) FEB 8

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Business Journal (Cir. W. 7,500) 1

1987

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' "· 1888 USD\squeaks past Loyola for got a career-high 18 rebounds and and poise."

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~NAR: The University ofSan Diego is Sf>onsonng a business u~akfa,t seminar titled "Health Promo~Workplace"at the Manchester Conference Center. Continental breakfa t begins at 7:30 a.m.; the seminar is sched_uled for 8 a.m. The fee is $15. For add111onal information, call 260-4585.

_§_PORTS ~ride pitched a six-hitter -~t(e Long Beach State baseball team (2-2) past the host Toreros, 7-1. John Holt had a bases-empty home run for USD (3-1) . . . Ken Kuperstem defeated Jim cNamee 7-6, 6-3 at No. 1 smgles to

Los Angeles, CA (Lo Angele Co.) Lo Angeles Times (Cir. D. 1,076,466) (Cir. S . 1,346,343)

chipped in with five assists. It was a good night's work, but it would have wasted effort had his com- rades no~ reported in for duty. Early m the game, at a time when LMU (10-12, 2-7) was gaining its con• fidence, the Toreros were forced to go to their bench. Forward Nils Mad- den, who had spearheaded last week's 82-48 rout of LMU with 17 points, was pl;,gued with foul prob- lems, which prompted Egan to play een ment, scored 17 points, got six re- ~unds and put the Toreros in a posi- t10n to go mto overtime and win the Munn and Manor also took their t~rns carrying the load, but at all h_mes Leonard was there, steadying hJS teammJtes as the floor leader and scoring when called upon. Leon- ard scored 15, had six rebounds and That's the way Leonard has been playing all season, but this weekend "other" guard emerged as a "Danny Means had his best ball games of the season this weekend " said Egan. "He has always been 'a game. contributed eight assists. Krallman. Krallman accepted the assign-

He also scored 17 points, made a key steal in the first overtime that resulted in a three-point play for the Toreros and forced LMU's best play- er to foul out two seconds into the Me.ans, taking the tip from Thomp- son m the second overtime, was fo uled driving for the basket by Mike Yoest. Yoest, who had 17 points, was at the heart of LMU's success, but now he was on the bench. Means hit one of two free throws to give USD a 75 74 lead, and he Toreros never trailed again. LMU pulled even at 79-all with 2:26 to go, but Means sank a 16-foot jumper for an 81-79 lead and the Toreros were USD_ had grabbed a seven-point lead with 7:47 to go in regulation but then went into a shell and didn't hit a field goal the rest of the second half. The Toreros managed eight more ~ints from the free-throw line, but Victor Lazzaretti's tip in with five seconds to go tied the score at 65 and set up the first overtime. Leonard had gotten off a 25-footer, which bounced off the board and off the rim at the buzzer, but it was only a pre- second overtime. on their way.

lead the vi 1ting Arizona State m n's ten~eam past the Toreros,

1987

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San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) San Diego Union (Cir. D. 217,069) (Cir. S. 341,840)

Common Opponents

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ong lhe four top learn m u ndmgs," and thus horn ·, urt dvantag m nt first round -RAY IPTO 0

lh e games-lesa lhan 340, 48 pointa against San lhe1r lowe t total in five playing hkc a ~te~ lately, have fallen to 10-10 h Thmge may turn ar~und at oFme, lhough, where Loyola 188 2 orward "k y · · 1 e oest continues to pace lhree Lions in doubl r e 1gures 10. Their ~:go was the Lio

with a 21.1-point av Chris Nikch h Mark Armstri;1c

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about 13 • g are each scoring Enoch s 1 0:~n~ a game. Guard starter thr ' who became a 58 pointa !: games ago, has scored overall 8 star tcr to raise his ave age to 9.8. -ALANDROOZ

Scott

Thompson, th~~e was the We~ g1ate Athletic Conference player of the week for the second t~me this season. Thomp· son, a two-time All-WCAC selection bad 43 points a 31 rebounds in tw~ • USD victon ' foot center,

El Cajon, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Calllornlan (Cir. D. 100,271)

Jude f9r _what was to come.

El Cajon, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Californian (Cir. D. 100,271)

1981

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!'1 Toreras win second straight game \ . The University of San D~eg~basketball team won its -i second game m as many mgRfs-'Barlirda_y with a 62-54 victory over Loyola· 1arymo~nt m the U~D Sports Center. Julie Evans sparked a come-from-behmd ~ffort with 14 of her 20 points in the second

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S11n Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

Est. 1888

half a~ the T?reras wiped out a 32-23 halftime deficit with a 39-22 burst in the fmal 20 minutes. Chris Burke added 15 points and Kelli Behren~ 11 points and IO rebounds. The Toreras, now 10-11 overall and 3-4 m West Coast Athletic Conference play, next visit Loyola- Marymount on Friday night and Pepperdme next Saturday before commg home to host U.S. International on Saturday, Feb. ~ . --- - - ge disqualified from both murder c ses

1987

FEB 7

!~~swin ~n double overtime USO s seven-foot center, Scott

Lazzarett1 had stolen an in- ~ounds_ pass with 18 seconds left m_the first overtime and fed off to Mike Yoest, who was fouled and ~ade one of two free throws to tie the. game at 74 and send the game mto the second extra peri· od. La~zaretti also forced the first ~vertime by making a layin that tied the contest at 65 with five seconds remaining in regulation. Means and Steve Krallman added 17 points apiece for the Torer

Thompson. The pair battled him on even terms early, but Thom . son ended up with 17 points arfd 18 rebounds in Saturday's re- match of West Coast Athlete Conferenc~ foes, enough to hold off t~e Lions 88-82 in double- overtime at Gertsen Pavilion. Coupl~d with Gonzaga's sec- ~nd straight loss on the road this lime to San Francisco 81-73, USD now holds a commanding 2'/2- game lead over the Bulldogs for the WCAC lead with just four Danny Means' 16-foot Jumper ~napped a 79-79 tie with 2:16 left m the second overtime, and USO went on to reel off a 9-0 string to games remaining.

LOS ANGELES - Nine days ago, UniversiQ. . of San Diego bask~tball coach Hank Egan said that tt was not the usual Loyola ~arymount team his Toreros had Just walloped. On that day USD • b\ew ?u~ the visitors 82-54 '_ the \ Lions biggest defeat in five years. : . So, Loyola ~arymount, ranked m the top ten m scoring offense wei:t back to basics. The tea~ decided to work the ball in to center Darryl Carter, a 6-foot-8 semor who missed the previous game. He had been suspended by coach ~au! Westhead, the former Lakers coach, for curfew vio- lations. _An arroused Carter, along with Lazzaretti, tried to stop Vi

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the challenge will stand," McArdle said. The challenges to Kennedy were based on the fact that his nephew has worked as a private in· vestigator in the Lucas cases and will be a witness in the trial and the fact that, as assistant district attorney in 1973, Kennedy signed an information document charging Lucas in an earlier case with rape and kidnapping. "Judge Kennedy recognized the gamesmanship involved had nothing to do with either party's per· sonal belief he would not be fair and impartial in either proceeding, but were tactics designed to achieve a preferred order of trial,'' Wiener wrote. The appellate court termed the consolidation motion by Miller's office .{ill 'obvious effort" ,to avoid having the older ca~. involving the Jacoiis/ and Garcia killings, tried first. /

cia, 29, had been assigned to Kennedy for trial last November. Kennedy was bearing pretrial motions in that ca e when the defense challenge was filed ln the other case. ut1on motion ct consohdate the cases prompted the defense challenge in the case involv• ing the 1984 slayings of Univer 1ty of San Diego student A ne Catherine Swanke. 22; Rhonda Strang, 24· and a child Strang was baby-sitting, Amber Fisher, 3, and an attack on Jody Santiago, 34 Deputy D1stnct Attorney Thomas McArdle praised the new ruling. notmg that the case Ken• dy had been hearing will be sent back to Superi· or Court Judge J. Richard Haden f eassign· ment. "The rulings made by Kennedy up to the time of A pros

take the game.

Santa Ana, CA (Orange Co.) Register (Morning Ed.) (Cir. D. 263,099) (Cir. S. 280,000) FEB 8

1987

from St. Mary's the Golden Eagles (2-3-1} at

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Southwestern Cerritos 5, Canyons 4: Sopho- more catcher Craig Wilson went 2 for 4 with a homer and three RBI and Tim Lockhardt surrendered six hits while striking out five and walking three as the Falcons '1-0) won at Cerritos. Saddleback 6, Rio Hondo 2: Freshman Dan Blancett allo\.\ ed o~e earned run while stnking out nme and walking two in seven in- nmgs_ to help the Gauchos (1-0) to the victory at Saddlehack. Dave Shetland, Bill Lasher and Scott Hefner had two hits each to spur the victory. In the College of the Desert Toumament: ~pre~s 17, San Diego City 7: David Rice struck out five and walked thr_ee in five innings to lead the Ce!ltunons (2-0) to victory

Anteaters win third in a row, 5-4, 12-9 From staff,

Tempe, Ariz. Bob Dombrowski added a two-run single in the m· nmg. Tim Esmay went 4 for 4 for An- zona State (5·l} with two doubles and an RBI In NAIA District 111: Master's 6, Christ College Irvine 2: The Mustangs (2-0) got a l\~o-run homer in the ninth inning with two outs from Mark McArthur in defeating the Eagles (0-2) at Irvine. The Mustangs scored four runs with two outs in the ninth. In JC games: Rancho Santiago 14, South• westem 4: Sophomore right fielder Bob Brucato of 1\-fission Viejo High hit a three-run homer in the eighth inning to lead the Dons (1-0 ) to the nonleague victory at

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San Diego City.

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